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PAGE 6

Dead Giveaway
by [?]

Had Duckworth come up with something new?

If so, why had he decided to discard it and forget his new theory?

If not, why had he formulated the new theory, and on what grounds?

Turnbull lit a cigarette and looked sourly at the smoke that drifted up from its tip. What the devil was eating him? He’d spent too much time away from Earth, that was the trouble. He’d been too deeply immersed in his study of Lobon for the past year. Now all he had to do was get a little hint of something connected with cultural xenology, and his mind went off on dizzy tizzies.

Forget it. Duckworth had thought he was on to something, found out that he wasn’t, and discarded the whole idea. And if someone like Scholar James Duckworth had decided it wasn’t worth fooling with, then why was a common Ph. D. like Turnbull worrying about it? Especially when he had no idea what had started Duckworth off in the first place.

And his thoughts came back around to that again. If Duckworth had thought enough of the idea to get excited over it, what had set him off? Even if it had later proved to be a bad lead, Turnbull felt he’d like to know what had made Duckworth think–even for a short time–that there was some other explanation for the City.

Ah, hell! He’d ask Duckworth some day. There was plenty of time.

He went over to the phone, dialed a number, and sat down comfortably in his fat blue overstuffed chair. It buzzed for half a minute, then the telltale lit up, but the screen remained dark.

“Dave!” said a feminine voice. “Are you back? Where on Earth have you been?”

“I haven’t,” said Turnbull. “How come no vision?”

“I was in the hammam, silly. And what do you mean ‘I haven’t’? You haven’t what?”

“You asked me where on Earth I’d been, and I said I haven’t.”

“Oh! Lucky man! Gallivanting around the starways while us poor humans have to stay home.”

“Yeah, great fun. Now look, Dee, get some clothes on and turn on your pickup. I don’t like talking to gray screens.”

“Half a sec.” There was a minute’s pause, then the screen came on, showing the girl’s face. “Now, what do you have on your purported mind?”

“Simple. I’ve been off Earth for a year, staring at bearded faces and listening to baritone voices. If it isn’t too short notice, I’d like to take you to dinner and a show and whatever else suggests itself afterward.”

“Done!” she said. “What time?”

“Twenty hundred? At your place?”

“I’ll be waiting.”

Dave Turnbull cut the circuit, grinning. The Duckworth problem had almost faded from his mind. But it flared back up again when he glanced at the mail tubes on his desk.

“Damn!” he said.

He turned back to the phone, jammed a finger into the dial and spun it angrily. After a moment, the screen came to life with the features of a beautifully smiling but obviously efficient blond girl.

“Interstellar Communications. May I serve you, sir?”

“How long will it take to get a message to Mendez? And what will it cost?”

“One moment, sir.” Her right hand moved off-screen, and her eyes shifted to look at a screen that Turnbull couldn’t see. “Mendez,” she said shortly. “The message will reach there in five hours and thirty-six minutes total transmission time. Allow an hour’s delay for getting the message on the tapes for beaming.

“The cost is one seventy-five per symbol. Spaces and punctuation marks are considered symbols. A, an, and, and the are symbols.”

Turnbull thought a moment. It was high–damned high. But then a man with a bona fide Ph. D. was not exactly a poor man if he worked at his specialty or taught.

“I’ll call you back as soon as I’ve composed the message,” he said.

“Very well, sir.”

He cut the circuit, grabbed a pencil and started scribbling. When he’d finished reducing the thing to its bare minimum, he started to dial the number again. Then he scowled and dialed another number.